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Jan 30, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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who would leave his job to start a new business in that environment? okay. retail sales weren't that bad. but they nose dived right at the end of the quarter. retailers were afraid to restock inventory figuring that spending would drop off the cliff right along with the nation's finances. it was all in all a very bad time for our nation. now, overlay the storm of the century for the northeast. one that shut down the wealthiest area of the country for several weeks and caused what ultimately may be $100 billion in damage. you had the physical shutdown from the storm neatly and miserably dovetailing with the mental shutdown caused by washington. the result, the abysmal and artificially reduced gross domestic product number we saw today. most money managers are fixated on that top-down analysis. they look at those numbers, they care, they correctly detected the secession the business in this country was undergoing. they pulled in their horns because of it. some cases, dramatically. i understood it. say we came in to 2013 over the fiscal cliff. i would say the v
who would leave his job to start a new business in that environment? okay. retail sales weren't that bad. but they nose dived right at the end of the quarter. retailers were afraid to restock inventory figuring that spending would drop off the cliff right along with the nation's finances. it was all in all a very bad time for our nation. now, overlay the storm of the century for the northeast. one that shut down the wealthiest area of the country for several weeks and caused what ultimately may...
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Jan 29, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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eye 30
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if you haven't reached out and grabbed this completely benign environment, you've really underperformed. if you look at the housing prices, the schiller index out here, we're at six-year highs, november to november. you have a place, as guy said, rates are telling you what's going on. you know what they called the two year note? >> the bunde-schad. this is telling you that even germany, which was the ultimate fight to quality, they were negative ten basis points. >> yeah, it is the regret rally, for anybody who missed last year, you got to chase it up at these levels. i can find 20 different reasons why the market should go down but it just doesn't. it keeps going up. a lot of it does appear to be cash coming into the market. the market isn't necessarily reacting to good or bad news. it is just mechanical. scares me a little bit. >> to brian's point. it is institutional asset allocation. one of the things that came out of davos was an analysis of where earnings are and the earnings yield for the overall market, relative to german bonds, u.s. treasuries, et cetera. 7% are in the market,
if you haven't reached out and grabbed this completely benign environment, you've really underperformed. if you look at the housing prices, the schiller index out here, we're at six-year highs, november to november. you have a place, as guy said, rates are telling you what's going on. you know what they called the two year note? >> the bunde-schad. this is telling you that even germany, which was the ultimate fight to quality, they were negative ten basis points. >> yeah, it is the...
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well as emotionally so introverts what they're most alive in their most switched on when they're in environments where there is less stimulation coming at them by which i don't mean intellectual stimulation but rather just less less of a sense of how about let's you know use computer lights that kind of thing sensory stimulation yeah whereas extroverts really crave more stimulation in order to feel at their best and when they're not getting it they start to feel bored and restless you know there's a theory about the suggests that the most control is is the choke point it's the all of all of our sensory inputs with the exception of fuel factors sensor smell go through the most before they're distributed to the other parts of the cortex that process vision in the arcs of. the auditory in the in the in the bridle region so on and again the volume control the film of this is controlled largely by dopamine and that people who have normally higher levels of dope i mean tend to be quieter because the world is loud to them they've got a lot of auditory and poor a lot of visual you know everything they n
well as emotionally so introverts what they're most alive in their most switched on when they're in environments where there is less stimulation coming at them by which i don't mean intellectual stimulation but rather just less less of a sense of how about let's you know use computer lights that kind of thing sensory stimulation yeah whereas extroverts really crave more stimulation in order to feel at their best and when they're not getting it they start to feel bored and restless you know...
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Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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eye 178
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right, we experienced expansion when many others are feeling the pressure of the slow interest rate environment. we pulled a lot of levers in our liability side, lowered our cost of interest bearing deposits and liabilities and also grew loans, which has been helpful. >> we've been very bullish on "mad money" on the midwestern region because of the resurgence of manufacturing. you think some of your strength also comes from the fact where you're located? >> i will tell you absolutely this regional economy in the midwest and extending up into the northeast where we have a significant part of our franchise is what i was called first in to the recession and first out. we've seen industrial and manufacturing come back strong and we're well-positioned to not only blend into that but really capitalize on a wide range of opportunities there. so that has been a real growth area and a strength for us. >> okay. now this morning, bernstein research, in a piece i didn't care for but i wanted to get your response. they took key from a hold to a sell saying that it would probably be difficult for you to make
right, we experienced expansion when many others are feeling the pressure of the slow interest rate environment. we pulled a lot of levers in our liability side, lowered our cost of interest bearing deposits and liabilities and also grew loans, which has been helpful. >> we've been very bullish on "mad money" on the midwestern region because of the resurgence of manufacturing. you think some of your strength also comes from the fact where you're located? >> i will tell you...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
71
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Jan 25, 2013
01/13
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SFGTV2
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eye 71
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if you are especially in a marine or water environment, you will find this layer of chert. it's in all colors, purple, green, red, blue. it's a beautiful rock. . >> one thing i wanted to ask you, the review in the paper recently on sunday said that your book is different from all the other books about the anastazi because you brought out some of the non-flattering parts of their culture like violence. how did you conclude that they were a violent culture? . >> well, i didn't necessarily conclude they were a violent culture, i just concluded there was violence in their culture. the evidence is very clear where you find masker sites, where every place you drop a trench there are bodies, unburied bodies missing their heads, in some cases where there will be a head in one room and you can match it up to the body which is in another room 100 yards away and they didn't just end up there; somebody took the head off. and there will be places where it's all femurs, all gathered together. and places where it's obviously some kind of warfare event where people are all huddled into one
if you are especially in a marine or water environment, you will find this layer of chert. it's in all colors, purple, green, red, blue. it's a beautiful rock. . >> one thing i wanted to ask you, the review in the paper recently on sunday said that your book is different from all the other books about the anastazi because you brought out some of the non-flattering parts of their culture like violence. how did you conclude that they were a violent culture? . >> well, i didn't...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
71
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Jan 30, 2013
01/13
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SFGTV2
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engineers developed two approaches to stormwater infrastructure to transport water away from the urban environment. one approach was to carry waste and stormwater through the same pipe. this combined system was less expensive than building two individual pipe networks. and stormwater was seen as a way to flush out the sewers. through the 19th century, the combined system was considered state-of-the-art throughout the world, and is still in use in many cities today. but cities constructed these systems before treatment was the standard. and even today's largest treatment plant doesn't have the capacity to treat the sudden volumes of water rushing through a combined system during rain. the plant is overloaded, and the excess rainwater, mixed with untreated raw sewage, is diverted straight into local waterways, creating a combined sewer overflow, or cso. there are over 700 communities in the united states with combined sewer systems. the other approach was to separate wastewater from stormwater, using two pipe networks. this separate system simply carries the stormwater away from the city. but even s
engineers developed two approaches to stormwater infrastructure to transport water away from the urban environment. one approach was to carry waste and stormwater through the same pipe. this combined system was less expensive than building two individual pipe networks. and stormwater was seen as a way to flush out the sewers. through the 19th century, the combined system was considered state-of-the-art throughout the world, and is still in use in many cities today. but cities constructed these...
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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
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KPIX
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eye 192
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and i say new york is probably most litigious environment in the world, and we have to be aware of that before we implement it. >> schieffer: what about people who sincerely believe that when we institute tighter controls on guns, even background checks, that it is infringing on their rights? >> well, we understand that. there are different cultures in this country and i think you know the supreme court case the district of columbia versus healthem, pretty much made certain that the concept of people having a right to guns with some legitimate regulations is here to stay. we're not looking to infringe on anybody's right to have guns legally. aware whatwe're looking to do is get the illegal guns off our streets. for our city, 90% of the guns we confiscate are coming from out of state. so we need a national, comprehensive strategy, or we need other states to put in the very strong, aggressive gun legislation that just passed under governor cuomo's leadership in the state legislature. so we are the target, so to speak. it's coming in from other places but we're clear not looking to infring
and i say new york is probably most litigious environment in the world, and we have to be aware of that before we implement it. >> schieffer: what about people who sincerely believe that when we institute tighter controls on guns, even background checks, that it is infringing on their rights? >> well, we understand that. there are different cultures in this country and i think you know the supreme court case the district of columbia versus healthem, pretty much made certain that the...
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
by
FBC
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eye 67
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>> global warming is a real issue and what is the most of corn tissue of our time, the environment we live in. obviously we have to protect it. i think that is a possibility and probably something that may be effective. stuart: wouldn't do any good? >> if we could get bipartisan support, it could -- stuart: when it would lower carbon emissions in a miniscule, may be lower the temperature is your.1% over a longer period of time. it is just a fund of money. that is why -- that is what it is all about. >> those dollars would be used for other efforts to control and focus on changing climate. stuart: they would just fill government coffers with that the needed money. >> if that is the case they wouldn't be a good thing. stuart: when you are if in favor of carbon tax to raise money. >> i am not. i am in favor of it as a way of controlling, beginning to control global warming and giving resources to combat it. stuart: i want to bring you the answer to the quiz we brought you before the break. we asked who said this? i am quoting directly. i am so tired of hearing that the rich are not payin
>> global warming is a real issue and what is the most of corn tissue of our time, the environment we live in. obviously we have to protect it. i think that is a possibility and probably something that may be effective. stuart: wouldn't do any good? >> if we could get bipartisan support, it could -- stuart: when it would lower carbon emissions in a miniscule, may be lower the temperature is your.1% over a longer period of time. it is just a fund of money. that is why -- that is what...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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79
Feb 1, 2013
02/13
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WHUT
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eye 79
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we will work hard to remove all the debris as soon as possible. >> environment ministry officials say they hope to complete the clean up in other mars by march next year. >>> the nuclear accident prompted a major rethink of japan's energy policy. in july the government introduced a system called the feed and tariff, allows people with renewable energy to sell companies at a fixed price. investors have rushed in to take advantage ofmarket. workers in southern japan started construction on one of japan's largest solar plants. a trading house is overseeing the project and extends over 1 million square meters. they purchased the site 30 years ago and hoped to build a petro chemical complex. but a recession foiled their plan. last october they announce ad new plan to go solar. they hope to switch on the plant in april of next year. they project it will be able to power 30,000 households. >> translator: we would like to promote renewable energy, and we would like to help cover power shortages in the region. so we want to contribute to the power supply. >> government officials say that as of
we will work hard to remove all the debris as soon as possible. >> environment ministry officials say they hope to complete the clean up in other mars by march next year. >>> the nuclear accident prompted a major rethink of japan's energy policy. in july the government introduced a system called the feed and tariff, allows people with renewable energy to sell companies at a fixed price. investors have rushed in to take advantage ofmarket. workers in southern japan started...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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SFGTV2
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eye 55
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narrator: los angeles county is beginning to develop ways to reduce the infrastructure's impact upon the environment. on the front lines of protecting the beaches, are the crews that clean out the stormwater system. man: this big vactor truck works on the same principle as your vacuum cleaner in your house, only this thing sucks up the whole house. some of the storm drains collect a lot of trash. i started cleaning drains in '93. they were horrible because they hadn't been maintained so much. now this is a priority. you have trash, animal waste, and it ends up on our beaches. that is a health risk. that is one of the main reasons why we have to close the beaches after heavy rain. narrator: but even when it's not raining, water still enters the stormwater system, carrying pollutants. here on the west coast, a lot of our storm drain systems are separate from the sanitary sewer system, so if you dump something in the storm drain, it goes right to the ocean untreated. alamillo: we haven't had a major rainstorm in the last year or so yet there's a lot of water in this creek here. i would say 20% of it is
narrator: los angeles county is beginning to develop ways to reduce the infrastructure's impact upon the environment. on the front lines of protecting the beaches, are the crews that clean out the stormwater system. man: this big vactor truck works on the same principle as your vacuum cleaner in your house, only this thing sucks up the whole house. some of the storm drains collect a lot of trash. i started cleaning drains in '93. they were horrible because they hadn't been maintained so much....
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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MSNBCW
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eye 84
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of people through environments. so, one of the key aspects is ensuring that a property is beautiful, this it's functional, that it's welcoming and that it reduces the fears of crime, that it allows an environment where people take ownership and accountability for the properties that they occupy, either live, work or study in. >> kelly, really interesting and i don't mean to get too heady here but this reminded reading about it about the discipline and punish and talking about the design of the prison and the changes that the prison -- prison design had taken over the course of a century and the affect on the national psyche. and discipline through design. and what can happen there and i imagine it's very important to you to create space that is are safe but that don't feel oppressive and fortified. >> that's so true. it's -- you know, when you have an environment that is fortified that has these very blatant or obtrusive barriers or security features, what it causes is the people using the spaces to increase their a
of people through environments. so, one of the key aspects is ensuring that a property is beautiful, this it's functional, that it's welcoming and that it reduces the fears of crime, that it allows an environment where people take ownership and accountability for the properties that they occupy, either live, work or study in. >> kelly, really interesting and i don't mean to get too heady here but this reminded reading about it about the discipline and punish and talking about the design...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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47
Jan 28, 2013
01/13
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 47
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is for improved economic conditions for my country's most vulnerable people that we create healthy environments and green spaces and by country men and women become fully conscious of their ability to change things for the better. >> baptist from haiti. my wish is for more justice, economic as well as social justice, starting with the recognition that poverty is not a sin. >> i wish for wish for a world without boarders and walls, age 53, argentina. [ applause ] >> i wish for a world where the children are more just and more kind and fair in the world than the one we know. president, barack obama. >> and now, this is a good one, that donna and i can very strongly identify with. i wish that male fashion designers would be forced to wear the things that they create for women like stelleto heals and it gets better. and that all politicians would have to live by the rules and laws they come up with for the rest of us like the ones on food stamps and the minimum wage by isabel, ienda >> i promise that i will not take my clothes off in public. >> i wish it would snow in the morning so nobody does not
is for improved economic conditions for my country's most vulnerable people that we create healthy environments and green spaces and by country men and women become fully conscious of their ability to change things for the better. >> baptist from haiti. my wish is for more justice, economic as well as social justice, starting with the recognition that poverty is not a sin. >> i wish for wish for a world without boarders and walls, age 53, argentina. [ applause ] >> i wish for...
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114
Feb 1, 2013
02/13
by
KQED
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eye 114
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so does it make sense that we'll get a double-digit rally in this environment? >> you know, based on the work that we're doing right now, no. but saying that, i think stocks can do well in a modest growth, modest inflation environment. we've been in that type of an environment. i think per's going to be in it at least through 2013. so stocks can do okay. especially stocks i think that have a lot of international exposure which the s&p 500, about 50% of those revenues come from overseas. so that's where the growth is we're going to continue to see the growth there. so i think the stock market can do okay, so to expect a 20% year in this slow-growth environment i don't think it's going to happen right now. >> i would like to ask you a little bit about a gloomy assessment that came out from bill gross, the bond guru from pimco. his february letter, he is saying he's to the buying into the bull market, telling investors that stocks pose too much of a risk for too little return. he says buy something you can sink your teeth in, commodities like gold. he also recommen
so does it make sense that we'll get a double-digit rally in this environment? >> you know, based on the work that we're doing right now, no. but saying that, i think stocks can do well in a modest growth, modest inflation environment. we've been in that type of an environment. i think per's going to be in it at least through 2013. so stocks can do okay. especially stocks i think that have a lot of international exposure which the s&p 500, about 50% of those revenues come from...
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95
Jan 28, 2013
01/13
by
CSPAN
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eye 95
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it was a horrible experience for a kid to try to go to school and learn in that environment. that is why i put so much emphasis now on making sure kids can go to school safely. >> how many kids do you have? >> one kid. >> your personal story everybody wanted to talk about, you said, i do not want to be one of those who are on talk shows. for people who have never heard this story, what is it? what happened when you were in junior high school. >> that was the hard part about the press. my personal story was more important than my first year as police chief in washington d.c. the interest is i was -- i ran away from home, and dropped out of school, 15 years old, got married, had my son when i was 15, i was a single mom with a ninth grade education when i started. i started with a ged. over the last 20 years, because i made a great decision to drop out of school, i spent 20 years trying to catch up and go back to school. now i have two master degrees. it was the hard way. >> why did you run away from home? >> i thought i knew everything. i was failing school because i had been s
it was a horrible experience for a kid to try to go to school and learn in that environment. that is why i put so much emphasis now on making sure kids can go to school safely. >> how many kids do you have? >> one kid. >> your personal story everybody wanted to talk about, you said, i do not want to be one of those who are on talk shows. for people who have never heard this story, what is it? what happened when you were in junior high school. >> that was the hard part...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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94
Jan 29, 2013
01/13
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SFGTV2
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eye 94
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he was a delight to work with, and together, we produced an article -- the energy environment conflict: fighting electric power facilities -- which was published in 1972. when bob graduated from uva he left a real hole in my life, but i knew for sure he was going to accomplish great things. we kept in touch as his career progressed until fbi swallowed him in 2001. bob's legal career has been mainly in public service with interruptions for private practice. all of his focus on criminal law, financial fraud, public corruption, narcotics, conspiracies, money laundering, terrorists. he first became known in san francisco where he served in the u.s. attorney's office, rising to be chief of the criminal division. thereafter, he moved to boston as assistant u.s. attorney and then to the u.s. justice department in washington where he led the criminal division. in 1998, bob returned to san francisco as united states attorney. please join me in welcoming my good friend and one of america's most distinguished public servants, robert muller. [applause] >> let me start off by thanking mason for tha
he was a delight to work with, and together, we produced an article -- the energy environment conflict: fighting electric power facilities -- which was published in 1972. when bob graduated from uva he left a real hole in my life, but i knew for sure he was going to accomplish great things. we kept in touch as his career progressed until fbi swallowed him in 2001. bob's legal career has been mainly in public service with interruptions for private practice. all of his focus on criminal law,...
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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
by
MSNBC
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eye 66
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it's been a missing piece of talking about the environment. the importance of bringing new people in the process is crucial. there's an interesting paper looking at the failure of cap and trade in congress. her conclusion is that there is a very good inside strategy for passing cap and trade, but no outside strategy to bring people in to pressure congress. that's going to be crucial if anything is going to move in a second term of an obama administration. >> we are going to stay on the question of earth and go to science class next. i promise, we are going to make it interesting. how did i know? well, i didn't really. see, i figured low testosterone would decrease my sex drive... but when i started losing energy and became moody... that's when i had an honest conversation with my doctor. we discussed all the symptoms... then he gave me some blood tests. showed it was low t. that's it. it was a number -- not just me. [ male announcer ] today, men with low t have androgel 1.62% (testosterone gel). the #1 prescribed topical testosterone replaceme
it's been a missing piece of talking about the environment. the importance of bringing new people in the process is crucial. there's an interesting paper looking at the failure of cap and trade in congress. her conclusion is that there is a very good inside strategy for passing cap and trade, but no outside strategy to bring people in to pressure congress. that's going to be crucial if anything is going to move in a second term of an obama administration. >> we are going to stay on the...
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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
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MSNBCW
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eye 54
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this is a messed up environment. >> all you young bucks out there, you don't want to be here, you don't want to come here. stay out of trouble. >> when our officers go to work every day, they know everyone they run into is going to be a criminal, and they are going to be dealing with the worst criminals, people who -- every criminal who has committed the worst act. >> martin horn is the head of new york city's department of corrections. he's a 30-year veteran who's risen through the ranks. >> we are working with serious, dangerous criminals. rikers island has ten different facilities. we have 10,000 inmates, a little bit more than that. we transfer 1,500 inmates every day to 20 different courthouses in new york city. >> this morning, we have approximately 147 courts going out throughout the five boroughs. >> i've been here for two days. two days in this pen, but i posted bail. it's taken that long for my bailout, you know what i mean? i'll be out in a minute, you know what i'm saying? >> reporter: he calls himself 7-up. but his real name is jay keene, and he's awaiting trial for driving
this is a messed up environment. >> all you young bucks out there, you don't want to be here, you don't want to come here. stay out of trouble. >> when our officers go to work every day, they know everyone they run into is going to be a criminal, and they are going to be dealing with the worst criminals, people who -- every criminal who has committed the worst act. >> martin horn is the head of new york city's department of corrections. he's a 30-year veteran who's risen...
47
47
Jan 29, 2013
01/13
by
FBC
tv
eye 47
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still not the point repertory environment is so burdensome the cost to have to lay out, they're looking as a business expense and saying what will make us profitable to the shareholders? they have to decide, they can go to the states to save that money because maybe they can hire more people, be they can open up multiple offices and do more than they can in new york because the fact taxes are so high here. liz: let anybody get a wake-up call about this? >> we certainly hope so. this is how democracies fail. not to say that democracy will fail, but look at you by. and one that is out of our way, but they have zero taxes for 50 years. which attracts so much business to that particular center of the universe to do business. liz: downtown manhattan, my brother-in-law is a fireman, i come from a long line of firemen, they have said the reason flooded downtown because it is a landfill. coming in from london. so it is underwater. they say to themselves another hurricane hits, we don't want to be flooded again. the federal reserve's offices got flooded. go ahead. does that factor into the decis
still not the point repertory environment is so burdensome the cost to have to lay out, they're looking as a business expense and saying what will make us profitable to the shareholders? they have to decide, they can go to the states to save that money because maybe they can hire more people, be they can open up multiple offices and do more than they can in new york because the fact taxes are so high here. liz: let anybody get a wake-up call about this? >> we certainly hope so. this is...
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85
Jan 24, 2013
01/13
by
WBAL
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eye 85
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diamond said if only washington could reach a grand bargain to fix the fiscal environment, then the u.s. could have a booming environment. >>> before she was the princess of wales, this unseen photo of princess diana is being auctioned off. written on the picture "not to be published" probably because she's sitting so close to mr. russell. >>> and an college upset. and a fine for one of the most elite players. >>> plus, terrible timing for one truck driver trying to beat a train. and take a look at what happens when you fight a fire in near zero temperatures. you're watching "early today." >>> now to mother stories that caught our eye this morning. we begin with an amazing explosion of metal and debris in vermont. a store surveillance camera captured a freight train barreling through a tractor trailer at a rail crossing. the truck driver said he was distracted and failed to notice the oncoming train. luckily no one was injured. >>> now, to the windy city of chicago where frozen conditions have failed to help a torched warehouse. officials say the ice-incrusted structure will have to be
diamond said if only washington could reach a grand bargain to fix the fiscal environment, then the u.s. could have a booming environment. >>> before she was the princess of wales, this unseen photo of princess diana is being auctioned off. written on the picture "not to be published" probably because she's sitting so close to mr. russell. >>> and an college upset. and a fine for one of the most elite players. >>> plus, terrible timing for one truck driver...
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so does it make sense that we'll get a double-digit rally in this environment? >> you know based on the work that we're doing right now, no. but saying that, i think stocks can do well in a modest growth, modest inflation environment. we've been in that type of an environment. i think per's going to be in it at least through 2013. so stocks can do okay. especially stocks i think that have a lot of international exposure which the s&p 500 about 50% of those revenues come from overseas. so that's where the growth is we're going to continue to see the growth there. so i think the stock market can do okay so to expect a 20% year in this slow-growth environment i don't think it's going to happen right now. >> i would like to ask you a little bit about a gloomy assessment that came out from bill gross the bond guru from pimco. his february letter, he is saying he's to the buying into the bull market telling investors that stocks pose too much of a risk for too little return. he says buy something you can sink your teeth in commodities like gold. he also recommends to
so does it make sense that we'll get a double-digit rally in this environment? >> you know based on the work that we're doing right now, no. but saying that, i think stocks can do well in a modest growth, modest inflation environment. we've been in that type of an environment. i think per's going to be in it at least through 2013. so stocks can do okay. especially stocks i think that have a lot of international exposure which the s&p 500 about 50% of those revenues come from overseas....
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
73
73
Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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SFGTV2
tv
eye 73
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but if we can't have environments where students feel comfortable attending school, being comfortable with themselves and in themselves in a school environment we will never have students that are predicated in a way to be able to learn. we have to have safe schools. so what we did this year, when all of our administrators came back from summer break, every administrator from principals to the purchasing manager, everyone saw bully this year. and we spent a full year with our bifl department of student, family and community resources, we spent a full day debriefing that movie and going through a process where we talked about it and it was amazing to see grown adults having these realizations about what bullying meant to them and having a commitment from every administrator in our district that we will not allow that to happen this year and that will be one of the focus areas this year. so the ability to have these children now watch the movie as well was extremely moving to us yesterday. i just have to share one anecdote from that movie. we had a question and answer session at the end
but if we can't have environments where students feel comfortable attending school, being comfortable with themselves and in themselves in a school environment we will never have students that are predicated in a way to be able to learn. we have to have safe schools. so what we did this year, when all of our administrators came back from summer break, every administrator from principals to the purchasing manager, everyone saw bully this year. and we spent a full year with our bifl department of...
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139
Feb 1, 2013
02/13
by
KCSMMHZ
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panasonic officials says the business environment could change though the yen's decline would push up sales. competition in the digital product market has been intensifying. >>> sharp said it posted its first profit in five quarters in the final three months of last year. sharp executives say operating profit in the october to december period totalled about $28 million. that came largely from higher than targeted sales of smartphones and crystal television sets. the company set up a goal to start posting profits in the second half of this fiscal year that ended in march this is a condition for the firm to continue to receive support from its main banks. the managing director says the company will make speedy efforts to reform its structure and says the company will continue to sell its overseas plants and receive investment from taiwan electronics giant. >>> managers at sharp are also betting on one unique technology to bring business back. we explain. >> reporter: engineers at sharp looked into the future and the monitors, public computers and in smartphones too. the new liquid cryst
panasonic officials says the business environment could change though the yen's decline would push up sales. competition in the digital product market has been intensifying. >>> sharp said it posted its first profit in five quarters in the final three months of last year. sharp executives say operating profit in the october to december period totalled about $28 million. that came largely from higher than targeted sales of smartphones and crystal television sets. the company set up a...
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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unlike the previous speaker because i think the regular story environment for banks is going to make it tougher for them to get the kind of earnings growth we like to see over the next six years. >> harry, do you see a change in the composition of the dow 30 in the next five or six years? >> i've always thought that hewlett-packard may eventually be in there. i think apple should be in there. they're not finished. they have a lot of innovation to go. i think hewlett-packard is sort of an old line while apple is a new line in the dow. i'd like to see that replacement potentially. >> so what was the problem with boeing and caterpillar? why didn't you pick them? >> i picked in bottom of '09 and ford. i think caterpillar has a lot of competition. several aircraft manufacturers are going to challenge boeing. i'd like to wait and see what happens with that one. i think i'd just shy away from that for now. fantastic company. there again, huge competition from china and japan in manufacturing the large equipment they're so good at. so i think there will be others. regulation may hurt financi
unlike the previous speaker because i think the regular story environment for banks is going to make it tougher for them to get the kind of earnings growth we like to see over the next six years. >> harry, do you see a change in the composition of the dow 30 in the next five or six years? >> i've always thought that hewlett-packard may eventually be in there. i think apple should be in there. they're not finished. they have a lot of innovation to go. i think hewlett-packard is sort...
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Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN
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it has a rugged ability, meant for a combat or environment that one would be placed in facing adversaries, human beings, people. that weapon can be retrofitted with other devices to enhance your offensive capability. the weapon itself has features to adjusted, optics sites, for example, that can cost hundreds of dollars and i have shot this weapon many times. it would enhance our capability in various tactical maneuvers whether it is from the shoulder or the hip or whether you choose to spray fire the weapon or individually shoot from the shoulder. the optic sites are amazing. the technology advances that weapon as -- that weapon is the weapon of our time. that is where we find ourselves today and certainly, i believe, is meant for the battlefield and a public safety environment only. >> thank you. mr. chairman, before i yield my time, i would like to submit testimony of maya ronman who is here today lost her father in a shooting in september in minneapolis. i would like unanimous consent to submit your testimony for the record. -- her testimony for the record. >> as we indicated earlier,
it has a rugged ability, meant for a combat or environment that one would be placed in facing adversaries, human beings, people. that weapon can be retrofitted with other devices to enhance your offensive capability. the weapon itself has features to adjusted, optics sites, for example, that can cost hundreds of dollars and i have shot this weapon many times. it would enhance our capability in various tactical maneuvers whether it is from the shoulder or the hip or whether you choose to spray...
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
by
CSPAN2
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on savings accounts and bonds are next to zero with no end in sight this is an incredibly scary the environment and the money show says he will help you. also we know our financial smarts peek at the mid-50s. we tend to be less doubting that that is why elderly people report being happier with life. something to look forward to but it is one of the many reasons why they are more gullible. some of them. but the third part is there is a concerted effort to release since the 1950's and has done more extreme and it has legitimacies per cubic of "fortune" magazine and there are tens stocks to select. 2007 they picked ag and it is no and on. that is true. the government did not bail out enron. and legitimacy is given to this and so they come to the many show and it looks great and these people are persuasive. nobody is walking around saying don't trust the word i am saying. and these people tell me this is what they believe and they will try these products and see what happens. i spoke to one person and he told me he lost a couple hundred thousand dollars during said doc, booming and i said what less
on savings accounts and bonds are next to zero with no end in sight this is an incredibly scary the environment and the money show says he will help you. also we know our financial smarts peek at the mid-50s. we tend to be less doubting that that is why elderly people report being happier with life. something to look forward to but it is one of the many reasons why they are more gullible. some of them. but the third part is there is a concerted effort to release since the 1950's and has done...
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118
Jan 30, 2013
01/13
by
FBC
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the story when the research came out in may saying the gasoline that's supposed to be great for the environment, great for cars, is actually dangerous for the car, and in some cases, it voids your warranty. it's a big deal. what's the new research show? >> well, it goes into another part of the fuel system. the original research we look at looked at just the valves and the valve seals so it hurts your engine. now, this looks at the fuel components, itself, the pumps, the components of the distribution system. there are other parts of the vehicle, too, to be tested. it takes awhile to do this, but layer upon layer, the more we look, the more problems we're seeing. it's irresponsible to move forward in this fashion knowing full well that millions of cars in america could be affected. this is just, you know, epa's deal to push this fuel out to cars that were not designed to use it. melissa: talk about that specifically. in what cars is it safe? i understand in flex fuel vehicles and cars that are 20 # -- 2012 and knewer. -- newer. >> cars designed for that use, designed to handle e-15, and the aut
the story when the research came out in may saying the gasoline that's supposed to be great for the environment, great for cars, is actually dangerous for the car, and in some cases, it voids your warranty. it's a big deal. what's the new research show? >> well, it goes into another part of the fuel system. the original research we look at looked at just the valves and the valve seals so it hurts your engine. now, this looks at the fuel components, itself, the pumps, the components of the...
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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FBC
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the state department already argued the filing sometime ago that it would have minimal impact on the environment. not a lot of dispute that this would be good for the economy. gasoline prices may have been sliding, but they seem relatively high command others think of the pipeline as a way of addressing that. given all that i suspect the president will approve the pipeline, but i could be wrong. gerri: as you know, the governor of nebraska said it will change the root of the pipeline and make it go around and offered that supplies water to the state of nebraska and other folks. is this going to be enough to satisfy the greenies out there? will the environmentalist be happy? >> it won't satisfy the environmentalists because there have always been to arguments. the first is the potential impact on the offer. that has been addressed somewhat by this change in the pipelines course. not enough for the environmentalists. the second issue has not been addressed here, which is the impact on climate change. the argument in criminalists offer is reducing the crude oil shipping into the gulf coast means mo
the state department already argued the filing sometime ago that it would have minimal impact on the environment. not a lot of dispute that this would be good for the economy. gasoline prices may have been sliding, but they seem relatively high command others think of the pipeline as a way of addressing that. given all that i suspect the president will approve the pipeline, but i could be wrong. gerri: as you know, the governor of nebraska said it will change the root of the pipeline and make...
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Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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WJZ
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less, everything-- feeding kids educating kids, having enough jobs having stability, take care of the environment-- that really becomes a crucial thing and a society can get on a path to be like the u.s. . >> rose: give me an example of what excites you about what we're looking from mapping of the human genome and all the progress made since 2001 when it was announce bide people who had been working on it so hard? >> understanding the genome allows us to begin to understand how life works including how disease works. so taking, for example cancer and saying, okay that looks like breast cancer but it's-- there's many different types there. so the drugs used to treat it should be custom ides according to that pattern. you're starting to see the payoff on that. if you take plant-- because we can look at their d.n.a.-- we are beginning to understand plant diseases and saying okay how can we allow african farmers not have all these insects and diseases that lower their call the ral productivity to be about a fifth of what we have here in the united states. so the genetic revolution is going to give to
less, everything-- feeding kids educating kids, having enough jobs having stability, take care of the environment-- that really becomes a crucial thing and a society can get on a path to be like the u.s. . >> rose: give me an example of what excites you about what we're looking from mapping of the human genome and all the progress made since 2001 when it was announce bide people who had been working on it so hard? >> understanding the genome allows us to begin to understand how life...